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Show THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY. UTAH, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1908. MOONLIGHT AND MONUMENTAL VALLEY After completing the excavation on | ered facts, which, when published, are , Alkali ridge, the party spent a week | destined to startle the scientific world, | fitting and packing pottery. Without For the last six years he has con-| trying, one cannot realize how hard | fined his time to the Navahos, estabibis to put a jar together from several | ising trading post different parts | hundred sherds. of the reservation Through his hon- | With the boxes safely on their way jest but strict dealing with them, M1 toward Monticello, the party left for} Wtherill has won the friendship of |} Bluff City. By following Indian trails | the entire Navaho nation, / and cow paths, we reached the Cortez-| Mrs. Wetherill is even a greater fa-| Bluift road early in the afternoon, The} vorite with the Navaho than her road led a sendy mosa, void of | husband. She has pent her entire | vegetation, and dry as a dusty street life amone them and speaks their Tor twive miles the read bore straight | language even more corre tly than) as an arrow, to the southwest Froin! the Indians themselvé fer excel- | the higher ridges one could see the | lent knowledge of their tongue gives) ribbon of hoof-beaten sand stretch| her a decided advantage with "her) away into the deep blue of the lower |children." She arbitrates their troubles, | canyons Our morning start had been | advises and doctors ne i Bees hes ; late so we intended to spend the night}| them the better methods of farming | at Recapture canyon, but upon reach-| and sheep raising; she gains their reing that place we found that the grass | spect by treating them as brothers and had all been destroyed by Indian | sisters sheep. and the river water was as thick There is an old Navaho story, which | as corn syrup. The horses were given ee h noth tote rill Be att oni n two hours' rest and the remaining | cording to the LVALNOS rs ether fifteen miles to Bluff were covered | was stolen, as a child, by w a vhs after dark ple "No white persor they say ' . "could weak OU langua well Little Grain Obtainable. ;As a remit of this bellef, Mrs. WethGrain had been a scarce article at) erly has been formally adopted by the the Aikali camp, consequently the Navahos and given a name very six companies of United State avali regions to the south of the Oljato po were encamped at the pring Tt the party, accompanied by Messi a "troubl ith the India was herc-| Jerald and Wetherill, raade a fourilded throughout the East ith man day @xcursion into the Chinili dratn-| fletitiou tori The only apparent. a Th country | exceeding! object of the cavalry vi Was to gain | vough, being entirel composed of military map the re rvation and/| hich, bare mosas and deep invou to give the me: 1 taste of mounta Under the guidanee of Mr. Wetherill worl It ilso necessary to show |the party followed Indian trails, rat the settlers that an army could traly if ever before traversed. by. whit verss th no ditheult of Indian! mer Up out of a canyon over a gre trails pan of mooth tone tu Wine The Indian In and about Moonaround the edge of the rimroek hanJight kn or the oldiey coming | dreds of feet from the canyon bottom e¢yen befor the traders and prepared }and then across a eantily cover themsely: for trouble, believing that > m Levon trail led On it went a battle wa inevitable beat hard fats ribbon of hoof print untraecefor them to believe that soldiers would! able in. place until the next canyon) invade their territory ithout mnie | y reached, when it dropped almos plain purpose All of the. gun in raight down for several hundreds of pawn at the Wetherill store were | fer then windin slowly down th taken out Men wert ent to Bluff i~@e-covered bottom of an uninhab-| for ammunition All of the prepara-, ited canyor ossibly the trall ston tions for confliet wet made and sojat the hogan of an Indian chieftan,| quietly that not even the traders them-| possibly it leads on and. on, finally elve me of the affair ending where t narently began One morning Chilibiga Navaho, in We passed corn if lds in whieh Inthe employ of the post tnneun 1) ds ere hoecing, som dressed in : : cotton clot me < ee 1] 3 ; mi HE h ie ri a sod a rund a a t n co: that entirely nude We passed| I foe} of oats "and heep tended by horses were well used up and were! Tydian, whether he ha seen her 01 allowed a vs rest at Bluff. The not, will address her upon meeting morning of August 11 the party left] poipn of the Wetherill children speak the river city for the Moonlight post | tne language fluently Jerome de Jerald, a prospector on the | The position of the Oljato post, 180 irs rhvdian lower Ean Juen river. overtook party at the river crossing and of course, joined forces with him. und ss Mr Witherill dex thikven ; iain * aves a " i; P the Bev The) | miles from the nearest railroad, and 70 mile from the nearest settlement, 4, eyjdenee enough of the esteem in continued the water hot weather had in the river so that lessened | which the Navahos no difMfl-} gynq his family culty encountered fording. was Immediately he The ‘ ‘after in. the crossing the forded the so-.muddy hardest ol F chee bit On account San}|rew Indians of were hold the Mr. dryness near encoun: of the Chinile ing iretirediwith) theis ‘that it (Hien wees Reet icing yet Wetherill post, the isheepeto Uma soa from place to place as the | 4 voured or trampled out |) hay-| small of alkali th stream rock a In in charge the company vr tungion soldiers' men shadow of encamped, of es Captain they eral is 4 was One almost in southern. Utah. For thirty over a treeless desert, there is drop of water. The sun beats Despite the miles not a down thrown back with | deep, white sand. lack of moisture one} sees some of the most beautiful scen-| ery in the world. fhe "road" leads through Monumental valley, a sandy | plain crowned with tall sandstone | spires, S Impossible the h Le eae t} wi + 18: ny ind ele of one lle os Me n ai ns ee ut es nia iat a A Oni Rae il i : \\ ith the « ik ai more Saw The ‘inhabi faa sa Tie pa a or Never oo Z oe I i i i) j cf ility, ence t corn gave havi ia n jua White ts"ot aT oxy ov: : ah spence hailed river re + «| bed cht Gah he ne 7 Fone, aE for Man. this "vas aan m ae a i > Swims have a ke an eng rod ap Mi 5% see River asi Sal on on trp mud the As pap and ly to give of color entire reglon, usual, one finds oe aces, Paicct ee the Che horses were rebuilt ind the was and Horse. on Se en pp? aide ee ier of the chief titles He to fame of the William bestowed it on Louise Leonard Miss Helen when he "Why. I even remember 1 liked "be st It wa ‘The the Wooden Shoes.' When | gjan't remember, the spell of think of that i way. Thomp bv rey ! be 7 | . , hin l Fran- | lic 6. Oe * oJ Pp a he did edited tl vaudeville Scan- nd cha mor making orld rE 2 te ‘Th Ul g ren‘t ol LILLIAN . lahat surily had the mesa ‘arty. ici divided. a the' Nas :Profes- vaelf, eoine. BY Sie 36. \thy ng _ Be Very. ned i uch for ld ul JU ther i \ but if life, th clum, old and the is they old. used ( the they |to jol old are on really re atl that ot] I. \ rt bic ift des] ) Of Une kno the old Considered nice did not have as was | she, bo clean and She | women if turned th lety eville. pla u differen i ‘ ; ut Shakesy i oad ) l uri ha eren plac ita The good standing i} have now, for no to them at all solely of men knew the would throughout most " : e Afterward Lillian tiful singer. ‘hea netur ft eeeee Glues phdoe resie) Macleans slip of a girl. beau- the aye ee re e heat was terrific One's knowledge | the with oversee Darla attend a farrier and bear a | master, good When I the civil panted by men. Mach man oPhe and but "! ul with ce a ot to be a beau-| cultivated a tan 4 voles . that voicc be ‘ brought rounded |ored at 42 of m . ne the older ed . ounce: other have | part Famili father their beau men and e older ee aoe etheart ind along 1 1 : 1 oul a t fe a e live a metropolitan opportunity. her sister were playing She in a} memories them some all to queer M It hall nd was fixture in that a was there of him that almost as|ten years Pastor thorough-/ then removed to he kept up| Broadway from his clever mantpula- | untic, aan is i= came Nts » New Yorker aT! oe vy ‘ ; Authoritle SRD ene Pasto1 Tony Pastor. to hu-| sid Wife : oo rude man thie eh " ee 4 evera iad 6 qui fly nd ore over lost nd at stream - i ie ndi in rere a trail h 1s. ks the pane ceed fields most panied | by ‘Reda tim . id Mc i) 'o' -cae ee me noonite o Donita as The youngsters 1 walk‘ xs jad the banks of an irrigating and ere Ignorant of our apuntil were ithin fifty of them Lpon seeing two men th dropped, instantly, thelr. trac with ually a The the diteh, U'll be out . ared two little the road so lay that place savage -par- we . where las Vhen grad- the within ehild lipped across the ditch in an jattempt to make her escape There } was no brush at at par ar ace Br) hie meee iy Mt geo cr through mud eving us wounded lamb in m nanne herself behind wood. ed out broke r meanwhile like a The smaller girl had co nletely r . santerek ones When opposite them the Navaho: greeting we callBoth ; hildre« instantly tood up, blush¥vY and wit ‘ olin . ‘ matuts re the: ee Vera < ae \ . behind a . reg irpnpat . bush ay , boxing match now nd ther i oO | watched our. de parture with opento church nd hen the. weather | mouthed astonishment ‘is fine there a bouquet for n bu q I remained there, "Tony Pastor's theater," opposite the Met- | 49¢@ after many years being of Ww J disagree born as the a very hen you interesting to ye ar when | forget éir ee var ee satisfactory feeling ave conscious your auditors ea ‘ ee ‘ to no the |in the street old and Barnum's museum, at Ann | age Broadway, here "The j of where : / ould | others have piled "themselves behind their parents. They show fear yet -at- | Lhelr curosity and dives, but no respectable. place. | MIS : dicted that in two rere hi ts ul unless L sold drinks lift wee iiowet err cieinie I am still runthe }{* i an 1. rthelriils = tm ide then and felt | o pair a a it a Oh ae vaudeville stage is as good have | that you are so that they elve their unhappiness thie eae is; PE g' sh is pleasant he years facial» expressions ‘of the youngsters. I de- | When visiting the hogans some of ‘ho there | children have disappeared "while the drinking or smoking, bill should be so clean trust in the strengti that ladies and children could a | ei ahh atts ene ie an gad ney ltend. There were hundreds of places | sight of the stranger. 'in New York then where variety por- }_ One would naturally suppose thata | formances were giv in saloons and |savage would have little respect for in|low J : took a theater a place where th have and | spouwld be New |- i where 4 jt ever cer was, ire excepting not Oo , een = ena od he ' i Re reer ict nan ‘raduaily the Ene. | 28 frem 1835 to 1836, 1 Ue Br aai © with only a door: separating fae et a lish name of vaudevill adopted, | 1838, and he used to declare that he | yim from the theater auditorium, and with a wave and instead of musle balls and variety | once knew, but had forgotten, and) hearing the musie and the applause, | old kind of | used to show Oh, there are His : ratisfying One he horses was Goodwin, who came from Boston to) show we had vaudeville house ~ |no one el knew t it was once | he said overcome by the heat and left on the this clty in 1876. Of him the veteran He Got "Mash Notes." iid of him, "Whatever the age of ‘That's good music to sit and hear, trail to recoyer and return to camp at | sald "And Nat Goodwin. When he ee SOLES. Vony Pastor, he does) look it.' In j|and I've sat right here and heard {ft} will, came down from Boston-not yet 20- ‘How about ‘mash notes Did | March last he celebrated the forty- | for 56 veai It's a fine tonic If Knows of Forgotten Races. he wanted to quit at the last minyte. | yoy a; t any when you used to sing)third anniversary of his advent as;I heard was robbed of . I'd get! "Oljato," as the Indians call the|I had to push him on the stage, and |° 1 - a tl ladies?" ~\a manager in metropolitan amuse-!old in a night. Yes, I'm a pretty Moonlight post,' was reached shortly | he made the biggest kind of a hit right am P a sree : ment elreles Hie hud been on the old man," he continued in a _ volce after 6 o'clock. The only building is | away with his imitations." May Irwin "Yes, they used to come, more OF) siag¢e from the age of 7 or 8, ap-! without a quaver and holding out! the store-home of John Wetherill and} was another to whom Tony Pastor | less. Of course, after 1 was married LT pearing first « an "infant prodigy" | hands that had no tremor, "but old | Wetherill has spent the | gave of his life in the south-|and in and , Tribune, Ise the ume vear they bought out Hool- | *°?! 1s 0rom Broadwa Ton Pastor went | €} theater at 201 Bowery, ifter "When I Fourteenth street, next door to/|playing there with great success. For | termined to » Tammany much of them, | fare could wo part as one ing 1s ‘ then inging ae am Variety 1 Way le used to te v his patriotism, he secured and learned er he Star 1 Banner' and went on the! waving the Star ind Stripe inging th patriotic ong, and tage nd in Work, Reviewed by the New || {ventyatve: dans of them the aide Manager York veterinarian, war , irough ao "a follow a The nail ‘ i il isa o ‘ i eem uch a » roused the enthusiasm of his audi- | tonhole and I make some of the mat Youngs Squaws Always Ifide. 10 to me that. an one hould. be en that they would not let him sing | jnee idols look pretts pale hen I This is the usual way in which one laug it that jol ou Some anything else, and his hearer houttroll. up Broadway." get ight of a oung squa Evi ry ' on ot ony ' tht i that 3° = - the mseltye, oars 4 it vee in ae Tasks aso: Matiager ae vane girl ab it we have =e n cota izghing tt o ist ny ast ye é Mi asto cthe mmer las cone thro. he hod ild lhe funs urn of the | gan his managerial career, starting Of th: 1y in hich he managed | same action The only aaa Te popular suc f the da may be on the road with minstrel companys his theater Tony Pastor uid a fe lion the incident at this time is that traced in. the me-% back to some | with Samuel Sharples In July of ? eae we were closc*enough to study the variety acts were) be interesting to| they»would be he oon began to take ae in. th ce oe performance - rom t bareback rider and to hor mouth of: Recapture:. ing So ag Sotto! in Veteran jooKed around with her scared blue | #0d I know if [ could get them inter-/|his success year after year, and when |ropolitan hotel, when the - present eyes, and said. ‘Oh Mr. Pastor, don't ested I'd just double my receipts. .So| he would appear on the stage him-| house was opened vou ‘like my singing " Tet her know | devised the scheme of giving free self, in his evening clothes and with Ilis Happiest Moments. \Wnat I thought of it by engaging her | admission to woman who were accom- | the crush hat which smed almost a Of his own appeerance before the a true | oy the in Mr. part rddled journey. | Blut. ee Heat. 5 lectio tae , ( wd \ Wi on we examined and. took') ho girl t lect . 5 = . note 5-0 col eC ‘ 1 of pottery. ing .o Sunday evening was spent in visit- | diteh ing several of the neighboring Indian | proaeh hogans Hiere we iw blanks in} y ae _ - white RUSSELL ; hangs a n © than nythings [tj t good t of. a jo} if it car Ut involving hi 1 entire change ise laugh ith each n enerin the character of the audien tlior f theater-goe1 It shov that pealed toa "Tl don't mind eclaimin it has the v par of lit n it, OcLik tl ran manage ' en i \ hen I g » A he ind nenth i id bringing rra jol thi I ha nown d r m ecood et ind | year aft { laugh just heart the ong | dime museums Clang of | man ould go she fin- | 2udience were I sat silent. I her voice, but it Denma him n variety lirst appeared under his direction. His acco to ow e got he to sing for him ce Oe eee = yo ‘That makes me think of Lillian! Russell I thought out that name for her-little Nellic Leonard [ ena think of the name of the ladw who jshed. under DISCOVERED Pastor, theatri- | ©! Wilsei Ve mnanacer WwW ai ; nd Bessl Want ‘lint 16 DESO! aa ™ : Lillian infused j oO ¢ that he had no water to drink. When Other Stars Discovered very thirsty our guide would hand oul Another of Tony Pastor's discov-/ a lemon, the juice of which is quite | eyes in the world of acting was Nat! family. greater tl at Sor VUm MIngs ame mysel miles up the Nate = . , nie of {I ¢ 1G di ita the ‘ he rreat muds v ave S dash d again t \ 1s tre iter ith exe optional el- | the rides entir ly « overing the ‘hor a fact no doubt due to the pres- | at. time Che river, at the crossing ij {M With WI he \ 0°. var'd vide | ind with. such of Lr ierill in t u party 4 t yar 3 de anc aN Y vat different time ve were furnished trength that Mr Wether ll and hi for our horses, when the eratn |) horse vere carrie é like distance} out At another time, after we|down stream before they gained the) cae -_-- ~ = Divides Bluft hurt ‘the digestion of even a child. Karly Monday morning e returnto Brat City he road hich folthe river,hasbeen. entlrely. de= troyed.; i places o- that. we ii chine ea jo several Party a to continued At description of the real natural beauty She appeared at the old Tony Pas- | 2 ma vomen he vished with ion of it, he was alway» sure of the ? : =< 3 _ of this ttle valley Great columns tor the ater, No, 58 Broadw =e ophim The result wa urprising \ heartiest welcome, and the audience the public eye, he once aid of red sandstone rise for a distance of | 5 gsit, . Niblo' "Garde ns Reieine oon the first on iitended and ould never b tisfled untill he sang "The happiest moments of my elght or nine hundred feet from the Twicker h Ps Berry The Kerr w that thers as nothing they could ome of his old time favorite ongs, | have been those when I was on level sand Nature has, with red eats ee ace Biladacl f oa: object tu-nothing to ke them such a Down in a Coal Mine," "Pull stage before a large audience and stay, and green, produced a most pew said C nee ene: eae blush-they pread the n ind | Down the Blind or Sarah YOuNS | that I was amusing the people ee, ked at the river, then at | with a most. wistful Xo 3} tried her hardest to! believe that the task was | The eccond trial wa uc- a colleague of Mr. King it from the other lde of the Mr. Spencer had found a nall boat sunk in the sand and wanted help in ralsing it ~ may travel, with hobbles}came to me and said she knew a een or twenty miles in a single little girl wit a lovely voice Twa Four hours were spent before | jn 1880-that I remember onder eaten Coen jaune : ee ¥v eae my remembe je eau 5 ve t t Qo oe 1e@ data? ell, t ‘ it he ney at ten-thirty marlor of an old house on Ninth : From Gypsum Springs to Moonlight treet, where she had lodgings and is one of the hardest rides to be found she sang for me = and is by the of of ae cea rs. bs th army officials, no Indians came to the ‘ ' i Tr ir wre he tore to ade, in driven by ‘ ecessity, during the. whol neriod the encampment In order to gain knowledge of th ! night ean unmercifully ouble force redomen nt m¢ into the 1 will fi PASTOR Antonio ( Tony') performer and ¥ E ' WEALD} Of th very. thirsty-the word | Russell, l-chosen, as a human be-| (Nellie) unable to drink it. . Horses Stray In Night. In the morning all of the horses! were missing. Except with old camping horses one is not safe in crossin the deserts, as an animal. not find5 the their back vent the itire | ¢ eine ith h ; Be ss : ee Gen rossing Wa reached shortly utter oon Heavy rains had swollen the Stream to such an extent that ergssing was most dangerous While the party was eating tts lunch Charles variou ae Soans uh vend ] ie Aol: the squaw comb and dress . 16 avoo 5 we iw them twist the cords preparitor to caving a4 At one hogan the squaw had a pot of green squash on the fire, at anther. place ome ears of corn were roastin ymsothe embe rs, and at L third plac a Jeg of mutton was roasting on the hot coals Ithough the usual sights about an Indian hut vere visible there was, In nearly every UrpHMising attempt at } n about ea Heffernan most intelligent people ivaho,, nation rhei corn fields are larger and in bette ene L tha eee pies a ve Several of the mo progressive hay built log. hut Lor winter quarters, but still retain the rude brush shelter for summe ust Doesn't Necd to Be Ripe. [t is very amusing to see a youthful Navaho tumbling about the ae munching at. a mall, green melon 6r squash The Indian begin cat« thelt € ‘table "As 0 as fy ait hdl Pp pias and ridat Lede js iéaten wav The queerest part ts tha 10 amount of reen stuff appears illel frequent resting ‘place for passing In- | late dians At nine-thirty camp was made! eq! Gyps Springs. One would judge | };. thay tus cen who named this pond AALS of water "spring" Of : little girl who flattened themselve earth. depre o up oul ap proach We passed rude. hogans of brush > and rrease-wood from. th depth af lich. ziéamed . the harp) + > The Sturgis, had been in conference with sevof the bad Indians, About four g ° asesRock > y, ea phaanee sae M vainotn Ae ret ine ig : ing ae tl ; 1h RA ofich had consumed the last of our flour,» opposites hore \fter three hours of | the Navahos readily furnished u ith hard tbor the boat was brought to) |) part of a mutton Possibly no wilder th urfac nd fler mmo mendit Indians are to be found in the United | landed on the ne bat Eating State day, yet these barbarian m | hurried supper the part er di the interior of the Navaho reservatio for the rit were willlnge to share their food with Barly the . morn th men stal strangers hen they found that! began. boating the ddl ind packs. our mission was peaceful iweross the. rivet The bugs) vhich During the last two days of the trip! Mrs, Wetherill is. driving, had to a steady downpour of rain fell, swel! be taken part nd taken to the op> ing the streams to such an extent thet yosite bank jn ection With | the was dangerous to eros em All) outfit fely on the other ide, noth- | | of the streams of the San Juan drain-|jng remained but the horse ATL of uge are full of quicksand th tnimia were lee th lige of After two days of rest the party, in) the iter Quieckl lipping their | company with Mr. Wetherill and fam-} rope the men ga vent such iy, and Ed King, a prospector from, hideous erie hat the horses plur he San Juan, began the journe to head forermost into the torrent... The | Bluff City Clifton Lochart, who has.) voor ere ur ‘ ‘ mpelled to been a member of the party during) nearl the entire distance and some | the summer, remained at Oljato ui had never been in water: before ry will instruet the two children of the) erossed safely, but the other six wert Wetherills and incidentally male t!carried below the landing and. stop| study of the Navahos, their habits and! ped in midstream on a sand bar, They language were finally driven back to. the ivl- | Che first night of the return trip) ing point for another trial | Was spep it a "dry camp betweer Just as we were ready to slip the | Gypsum rings and Moses och halters, a mall white mule belongPart of the horse tarted for Oljato : Vetherill jumped into the during the night, so that a late start um halfway acro ind: | | was made in the morning The river ad Upon reaching th United cose | ~~ LONY were ‘ P2t seh haere tered was found at the = Goa | goat herds Thett BUSSES Ons vide. Rain and Navaho sheep had | transported on the bony backs of a almost destroyed what wag ONC) racers known asa "road." | vv : six o'clock in the evening we Indians Prepare for War. filled our water bags at Moses Rock, a During the party's sojourn at Oljato great bluff, from which trickles a} -_- -- -~ - -- States" ince the vats ful no soil | P©* gras by their nember niaarad a BY N. M. JUDD hit m that a the dan- the he wert character of the is not the case, of ie men the quaw. of this young Most region women of are too so must the poor con- iving |for the |i" the | | | | | the dance furnishes the feast. The Indians who festivitles present their food Jol host with Sifts of blankets, muslins and 6'@!ns [he dance usually lasts two or three days, the feast coming at the la st da : ri day the hors were given a ve Vednesday morning we depart d £9 Monticello, 1 two days' journey from Bluff At the county seat two days will be consumed in repacking 1@ of "Such u = a mselves with cath older Sonia season the yearTPHaarerea hel TERE of ATCERL at t eEA this PIMA te = D atriotic sone of Old Glory-the same songs make the same old enough if the memory | ness falls off here." is pleasant, too Old One of tho associates value young |? buy a never change are Leated a ‘Warrican' a fe Pathe "It is a curious fact--you will laugh when I tell you, but it true that the opera hurt me more than an) other competing attraction.' "The Italian or German opera?" Gy) the Ttalian The German opera does not em to count But when the Italian season begins busi- children. however No white man is more paternal, In. word or action, than the ad father The old method of buying one's wifa still in esistence. The number of heep owned by the squaw regulates oldtime | US pottery for shipment Much that the summe1 It grieves work is so west, therefore possesses a thouroust) | sketch, "On Board the Mary Jane," at| man nature, and nothing shows it! Herald" office afterward stood for |age with stinging memories would be | manager says of Tony Pastor, hear a Clos knowledge of Indians Possibly noO}|a Detroit variety theater, and he saw | more than such letters. many years, and the present site of |a hard period of life to bear I have | that he is gone "He was a man ee ee ee ther man in the world is so famillar| them and engaged them for his the"LT belleve was the first to put/the St. Paul building He was born! none of that kind in my repertoire. | broad and kindly views, rar a . with the remains of the so-called "Cliff | ater. May Irwin was with him sey-| little plays on the variet tage, and /|in New York. his father being a perThen, with the thumbs and fore-|/of his public, original in hi Excursion to Downey, Idaho Dwellers." . Wetherill has made|en years, and then went to Daly's. | condensed comic operas, uch as | fumery maker in old Greenwich | fingers of his hands, he gave the neat- | just to his fellows, and, without court- | sojtember 4 and ¢ SEAT > numerous collections for Eastern mu- | Others of Pastor's discoveries were ‘Pinafore,' ‘The Pirates of Penzance,' | village, now the Ninth ward. When/!ly waxed ends of his mustache anoth|ing publicity, one of the most sympa- | jer, Son Tt a aia eee oe ot eee seums. n his exeavation of senaul Harrigan and Hart, Harry Kernell [ens ‘Olivette. I got a good many! he wa 2 years old he was apprenjer twist, and said: men in or out of the theatrical pro- | trim from Salt Lake, $5.30 "Clty Ticket "But dont you get the idea that T | fession."' Evans and Hiey, Neil Burgess. Gus to a "cireus manager to learn ! dwellings. Mr Wetherill has discoybrilliant beys and girls before the pub-|ticed Office, 201 Main St . MUST BE CLEANED TY OUT! SSE Owing to unexpected responses to our Mill Outlet Sale, and by request of our numerous patrons, we have decided to continue our sale to Saturday, September 12. We have received a large consignment of goods from our buyers, who are in the East, consisting of ladies' fine percale and fleeced lined wrappers, which we will place on sale. $1.50 values 98c; $1.75 values $1.19; also boys' waists and misses' dresses at great reduction. Children's Bearskin Coats, | Men's $4 and $5 Values, $1.98 Ladies' Underskirts, values 9 for- Men's for- $1.75 School Silk $7.50 98c Children's Dresses, Bib Overalls, Safety M 49c $2.25 | Ladies' for- Ladies' Shoes, Utz & Dunn's make, $3.50 value, on table oz. $1.00 values for- Boys' Underskirts, | values Children's Underwear, values for- $4.49 I 75¢ | for- $2.98 $.7.50 values $1.25 to $1.75 values for- School Waists Shirts, 40e to 75e values- and 98c to $1.25 29c, 35c, 39c, 49c E IN D Children's Ribbed Hose, values, sizes 6 to 9, for, pair- 35c for- $7.50 L 3 I-2c YARD Men's Suits, blacks and blue included, $12.00 values for- Suits, L, Work Pants, pat. tip Shoes, Boys' School values- value 98c People's Cash Store Men's Pleated Front Shirts, white and colored, $1.50 values Men's Salt Lake City White ers, 20@ Muslin $2.00 | Men's Shoes, $2.25 values, for $1.49 75c Boys' School Suits, $2.00 to $6.00 values, £or-- Draw- $1.25 values- 10c sizes, 2 1-2c. 45c Misses' all card- ftor- Underwear, value a suit, for-- 98c Cor. Richards & Ist So. St. Shoes, Buttons, $1.39 98c quality, $1.50 value- Pearl 2 1-2c $1.50 good Pins, card- 15¢ | Children's 7 1-2c Men's S $1.55 $1.95 $2.98 $3.98 |